Method for forming a patterned thick metallization atop a power semiconductor chip

ABSTRACT

A method is disclosed for forming a patterned thick metallization atop a semiconductor chip wafer. The method includes fabricating a nearly complete semiconductor chip wafer ready for metallization; depositing a bottom metal layer of sub-thickness TK 1  together with its built-in alignment mark using a hot metal process; depositing a top metal layer of sub-thickness TK 2  using a cold metal process thus forming a stacked thick metallization of total thickness TK=TK 1 +TK 2 ; then, use the built-in alignment mark as reference, patterning the stacked thick metallization. A patterned thick metallization is thus formed with the advantages of better metal step coverage owing to the superior step coverage nature of the hot metal process as compared to the cold metal process; and lower alignment error rate owing to the lower alignment signal noise nature of the cold metal process as compared to the hot metal process.

CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a divisional application of a U.S. patent application entitled “Method for Forming a Patterned Thick Metallization atop a Power Semiconductor Chip” by Il Kwan Lee with application Ser. No. 12/356,077 filed Jan. 20, 2009 now U.S. Pat. No. 8,067,304 whose content is hereby incorporated by reference for all purposes.

FIELD OF INVENTION

This invention relates generally to the field of power semiconductor chip fabrication. More specifically, the present invention is directed to a technique of fabricating thick metallization atop a power semiconductor chip wafer with high yield.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Semiconductor power device is one of the major pillars supporting modern day electronics industry. As part of the ongoing trend due to ever increasing chip integration density with concomitant higher power handling ability, low power consumption and low cost, copper wire becomes attractive in replacement of gold wire and Aluminum wire for use in wire bonding as copper wire provides the most cost effective solution to achieve a same design goal of connection loss. The major technical difficulty is its hardness, which requires increasing metallization thickness on the power semiconductor chip to accommodate copper wire bonding. Metal thickness in the range of 3 μm-6 μm (1 μm=1×10⁻⁶ meter) is usually required. Semiconductor power devices using traditional bonding wires use a single hot metal layer in the range from 1-3 micron to serve as both contact and bonding pad. Hot Al metal is used for its good step coverage to provide reliable contact within the contact holes as cold Al metal tends to cause voids within contact holes resulting in reliability failure. This is becoming more significant as the advance of technology improves the semiconductor area usage efficiency through the shrinkage of feature size. For example, the wall-to-wall pitch size of some of power MOSFETs in use today are in the order of 1 micron, leading to smaller contact holes dimension and tighten mask alignment tolerance. However the attribute of good step coverage of hot metal would degrade the sharpness of alignment mark for later masking process thus requiring larger tolerance margin while increasing the thickness of metal layer, leading to low semiconductor area usage efficiency. It is therefore desirable to develop new and improved approaches for deposition of thick metal layer in the range of 3-6 micron that would provide both reliable contact and effective alignment marks.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

A method is disclosed for forming a patterned thick metallization atop a surface insulation layer of a semiconductor power chip. The semiconductor power chip top has numerous pre-patterned contact zones. The method includes the following steps:

-   a) Fabricate a nearly complete semiconductor chip wafer with     built-in alignment marks ready for metallization. -   b) On top of the wafer, deposit a bottom metal layer of     sub-thickness TK1 using a hot metal process. -   c) On top of the bottom metal layer, deposit a top metal layer of     sub-thickness TK2 using a cold metal process thus forming a     composite thick metallization of total thickness TK=TK1+TK2. -   d) Using the built-in alignment mark as reference, pattern the     composite thick metallization.     In this way, a patterned thick metallization is formed with the     following process advantages: -   1. Better metal step coverage owing to the superior metal step     coverage nature of the hot metal process as compared to that of the     cold metal process. -   2. Lower alignment error rate owing to the lower alignment signal     noise nature of the cold metal process as compared to that of the     hot metal process.

In a more specific embodiment, the method further restricts the sub-thickness TK1 and the sub-thickness TK2 such that the total thickness TK does not exceed a pre-determined maximum total thickness TK_(max) beyond which an unacceptable alignment error rate results owing to an excessive alignment signal noise of the composite thick metallization.

In a more specific embodiment, the method further selects the sub-thickness TK1 and the sub-thickness TK2 such that their ratio R=TK2/TK1 does not exceed a pre-determined maximum ratio R_(max) beyond which an unacceptable metal step coverage results owing to an insufficient sub-thickness TK1.

In a more specific embodiment, the method further selects the sub-thickness TK1 and the sub-thickness TK2 such that their ratio R=TK2/TK1 does not fall below a pre-determined minimum ratio R_(min) below which an unacceptable alignment error rate results owing to an excessive sub-thickness TK1.

In a more specific embodiment, deposit the bottom metal layer using a hot metal process further includes vacuum depositing a composition of (aluminum, silicon, copper) at a temperature exceeding 400 degree C. Correspondingly, the composition further includes, by weight percentage, Al of about 98˜99%, Si of about 0.5˜1.5% and Cu of about 0.1˜1.0%.

In a more specific embodiment, deposit the top metal layer using a cold metal process further includes vacuum depositing a composition of (aluminum, copper) at a temperature of about 300±50 degree C. Correspondingly, the composition further includes, by weight percentage, Al of about 99.0˜99.9% and Cu of about 0.1˜1.0%.

In a more specific embodiment, TK_(max) is 6.0 μm, R_(max) is about 7:1 and R_(min) is about 3:1.

These aspects of the present invention and their numerous embodiments are further made apparent, in the remainder of the present description, to those of ordinary skill in the art.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

In order to more fully describe numerous embodiments of the present invention, reference is made to the accompanying drawings. However, these drawings are not to be considered limitations in the scope of the invention, but are merely illustrative:

FIG. 1A illustrates the top view of a power MOSFET semiconductor wafer with built-in alignment marks;

FIG. 1B illustrates a cross section of a portion of MOSFET chip before metallization;

FIG. 1C is a top view of the built-in alignment marks of FIG. 1A;

FIG. 1D is a cross section of a portion of built-in alignment mark of FIG. 1C;

FIG. 2A illustrates the cross section of a portion of a MOSFET chip after one embodiment of thick metallization process to accommodate Cu wire bonding;

FIG. 2B illustrates a cross section of a portion of the built-in alignment marks of FIG. 1C after one embodiment of thick metallization process to accommodate Cu wire bonding;

FIG. 3A illustrates the cross section of a portion of a MOSFET chip after another embodiment of thick metallization process to accommodate Cu wire bonding;

FIG. 3B illustrates a cross section of a portion of the built-in alignment marks of FIG. 1C after another embodiment of thick metallization process to accommodate Cu wire bonding; and

FIG. 4 illustrates a top view of MOSFET in package.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF SPECIFIC EMBODIMENTS

The description above and below plus the drawings contained herein merely focus on one or more currently preferred embodiments of the present invention and also describe some exemplary optional features and/or alternative embodiments. The description and drawings are presented for the purpose of illustration and, as such, are not limitations of the present invention. Thus, those of ordinary skill in the art would readily recognize variations, modifications, and alternatives. Such variations, modifications and alternatives should be understood to be also within the scope of the present invention.

FIG. 1A illustrates a typical layout of semiconductor wafer 10 ready for metallization comprising a plurality of trenched MOSFET chips 20 thereon each having a cross section view as shown in FIG. 1B. At four corners of wafer 10 there are alignment mark groups 11 for aligning masks to the wafer during manufacturing process. Each alignment mark groups 11 comprises multiple rows each having multiple 3 μm×4 μm trench boxes 1 a as shown in FIG. 1C. FIG. 1D shows the cross section of a trench box 1 a. The depth of the trench boxes 1 a is about 1.0 μm-1.5 μm. Alternatively, the alignment mark can be other geometric shapes, such as a cross. Referring to FIG. 1B, MOSFET chip 20 comprises an active area having a plurality of trenches 125 filed with insulated gate material 130 extending into an epitaxial layer 110 overlaying a substrate layer 105 that functions as a drain. In one embodiment the insulated gate has a thicker insulation region 115 in the bottom of the trenches 125. In another embodiment the insulation region 115 has substantially the same thickness as the gate insulation layer 120 on the sidewalls of trenches 125. MOSFET chip 20 further comprises body regions 135 extending between trenches and source regions 140 disposed in body regions next to the trenches. Body contact implant regions 155 are disposed between the source regions 140. A dielectric layer 145 overlaying the semiconductor surface with source/body contact openings 150-S open through the dielectric layer 145 for providing metal contact to the source/body regions. In general, the dielectric layer 145 may have a thickness between 0.3-1.0 micron and the widths of contact openings may range from 0.15 to 0.5 micron. In one embodiment, the dielectric layer 145 is about 0.5 micron and the source/body contact opening is about 0.25 micron.

MOSFET chip 20 further comprises a termination area having a gate contact opening 150-G that is opened through dielectric layer 145 on top of a gate runner trench 125-R for providing metal contact to gate 130. In one embodiment the gate runner trench 125-R is wider and deeper than the gate trenches 125. In another embodiment the width of gate contact opening 150-G is narrower than the width of source/body contact openings 150-S. The gate trenches 125 and the gate runner trench 125-R are interconnected in a third dimension (not shown).

As illustrated in FIG. 2A a metal layer 160 is then deposited on top of the semiconductor wafer 10. The alignment marks 1 a are also covered with metal during this metallization process. The metal covered alignment marks are used to align a mask to pattern metal layer 160 for separating the gate metal 160-G from source metal 160-S. To provide a bonding pad thick enough to accommodate Cu wire bonding, metal layer 160 is provided with a thickness between 3-6 micron, preferably between 4-5 micron. A combination of Type-I metallization and Type-II metallization may be used. The usage of the terminologies “type-I metallization” and “type-II metallization” is for the purpose of conveying that, in the art of semiconductor wafer processing, numerous types of material compositions are available for the metallization. Furthermore, for each material composition there is usually a preferred wafer processing parameter set for the associated deposition process. As specific examples the following are defined:

-   -   Type-I metallization: hot metal containing aluminum (Al),         silicon (Si) and copper (Cu), with a vacuum deposition         temperature at 400 degree C. or above. In one embodiment, the         composition (Al, Si, Cu) contains, by weight percentage, Al of         about 98˜99%, Si of about 0.5˜1.5% and Cu of about 0.1˜1.0%. A         preferred specific embodiment contains, by weight percentage, Al         of about 98.5%, Si of about 1.0% and Cu of about 0.5%. It is         remarked that, in the art, the minute dopant amount of Si is         added in the hot metal to prevent Al spiking downward into the         Si wafer.     -   Type-II metallization: cold metal containing aluminum (Al) and         copper (Cu), with a vacuum deposition temperature of about 350         degree C. or below. In one embodiment, the composition of (Al,         Cu) contains, by weight percentage, Al of about 99.0˜99.9% and         Cu of about 0.1˜1.0%. A preferred specific embodiment contains,         by weight percentage, Al of about 99.5% and Cu of about 0.5%.

In one embodiment, a Type-I hot Al metal layer with thickness of 4 micron is deposited using CVD at a temperature exceeds 400 degree C. FIG. 2B shows the cross section of alignment mark 1 a after the deposition of 4 micron Type-I metallization. As can be seen the metal layer 160 provides good step coverage. However, the thick metal layer 160 level off the step profile of the underlying alignment mark. Each individual mark distortion produces noisy alignment signal in masking alignment process due to lose of contrast ratio. Also, the grain boundary structure of Type-I metallization is such that light from an alignment mark detector cannot clearly see the alignment mark 1 a′ through the Type-I metal; the grain boundary structure of Type-II metallization is better suited for this task. The noisy alignment signal caused by poor contrast ratio of alignment mark resulting in 45.8% error rate using single reading methodology in the following contact metal mask etching process. This could reduce the yield of finished product as much as 20%. In order to maintain a good product yield, such high alignment error rate requires much larger mask alignment tolerance therefore greatly discounting the advantage provided by small feature size enabled by the advanced technologies.

In another embodiment, as shown in FIGS. 3A-3B, a combination of Type-I and Type-II metal deposition processes are used. Preferably a thin layer of Type-I (hot) metallization 161 is carried out followed by a thick layer of Type-II (cold) metallization 162. The selected thickness TK1 of the thin Type-I metallization 161 (hot metal) for illustration is about 0.5-1 μm and the selected thickness TK2 of the thin Type-II metallization 162 (cold metal) for illustration is about 3-4 μm. FIGS. 3A and 3B are the cross sections of MOSFET chip 20″ and alignment mark 1 a″ after deposition of thin layer Type-I metallization and thick layer of Type-II metallization respectively. Comparing FIGS. 2A and 2B, with FIGS. 3A and 3B shows the combined metallization layer provides a top surface conforming to the underling profile while maintaining good contact to the semiconductor area. The step profile of alignment mark is cast onto the top surface with reasonably good contrast ratio to enable accurate mask alignment. Further the stepping structure on the top metal surface provides the benefit of cushion effect in wire bonding therefore reducing the impact of wire bonding.

As mentioned before, hot metal is known to produce superior metal step coverage than the cold metal at the metallization/semiconductor interface in that the hot metal shows less propensity toward formation of unacceptable voids in the metal near the interface. Hence, the bottom Type-I metallization layer must be thick enough to provide sufficient amount of hot metal so as to form a void-free metallization/semiconductor interface. However the alignment mark contrast ratio will degrade with the increase of Type-I metallization layer thickness. Test results show the thickness of Type-I metallization is preferably between 0.5-1 micron to provide a good contact to the semiconductor area without degrading the contrast ratio beyond the level of acceptance. Further to maintain a good metal alignment pass rate, the total thickness of combined Type-I and Type-II metallization layers should not exceed 6 micron, preferably not to exceed 5 micron. An associated empirical test, not described here in detail, has further determined that the ratio R=TK2/TK1 should not exceed a maximum ratio R_(max) of about 7:1 beyond which an unacceptable metal step coverage results due to an insufficient hot metal thickness TK1, or not to fall below a minimum ratio R_(min) of about 3:1 below which an unacceptable alignment error rate results owing to an excessive sub-thickness TK1. For example, combination of 0.5 micron Type-I followed by 3.5 micron Type-II and 1 micron of Type-I followed by 3 micron of Type-II both yield 4 micron combined thickness with very good contact and alignment pass rate.

Semiconductor wafer 10 is then diced into individual chips 20″ for packaging into individual devices after backside thinning and metallization. As shown in FIG. 4, chip 20″ is disposed on a lead frame 200 with MOSFET drain connected to die pad 210 of lead frame 200. Lead frame 200 comprising a drain lead 220 connected to die pad 210 on one side and with a source lead 230 and a gate lead 240 on another side. Cu wires may be used to wire bond the source and gate of the chip 20″ to the source lead 230 and the gate lead 240 on the lead frame 200. A plurality of Cu wires 250 are used as source wires for bonding to the source metallization layer 160-S on one end and to source leads 230 on the other end. In one embodiment a gate wire 260 bonding to the gate metallization layer 160-G on one end and to the gate lead 240 on the other end comprises Cu as well. In another embodiment the gate wire 260 comprises gold wire to minimize the gate wire diameter therefore the gate metallization 160-G can be minimized for further improvement of the semiconductor area usage efficiency.

A method has been described for forming a patterned stacked thick metallization atop a semiconductor wafer. The method includes the following steps:

-   -   a) Fabricate a nearly complete power semiconductor wafer ready         for metallization.     -   b) On top of the wafer, deposit a bottom metal layer of         thickness TK1 together with its built-in alignment mark using a         hot metal process.     -   c) On top of the bottom metal layer, deposit a top metal layer         of thickness TK2 using a cold metal process thus forming a         composite thick metallization of total thickness TK=TK1+TK2.     -   d) Use the built-in alignment mark as reference, pattern the         stacked thick metallization.         A patterned stacked thick metallization is thus formed with the         following advantages:     -   Better metal step coverage owing to the superior metal step         coverage nature of the hot metal process as compared to that of         the cold metal process.     -   Lower alignment error rate owing to the lower alignment signal         noise nature of the cold metal process as compared to that of         the hot metal process.

While the description above contains many specificities, these specificities should not be constructed as accordingly limiting the scope of the present invention but as merely providing illustrations of numerous presently preferred embodiments of this invention. Throughout the description and drawings, numerous exemplary embodiments were given with reference to specific configurations. It will be appreciated by those of ordinary skill in the art that the present invention can be embodied in numerous other specific forms and those of ordinary skill in the art would be able to practice such other embodiments without undue experimentation. For example, the present invention methodology of using a stacked metallization structure to simultaneously leverage the numerous distinct advantages of the various metallic sub-layers is anticipated to be applicable to multi-layer stacks of numerous other metallic compositions and associated deposition steps as well. The scope of the present invention, for the purpose of the present patent document, is hence not limited merely to the specific exemplary embodiments of the foregoing description, but rather is indicated by the following claims. Any and all modifications that come within the meaning and range of equivalents within the claims are intended to be considered as being embraced within the spirit and scope of the present invention. 

1. A method for forming a patterned thick metallization atop a surface insulation layer of a power semiconductor chip with a plurality of pre-patterned contact zones thereon, the method comprises: a) providing a nearly completely fabricated semiconductor chip wafer together with its built-in alignment mark ready for metallization; b) depositing a bottom metal layer, atop the wafer, of sub-thickness TK1 using a hot metal process; c) depositing a top metal layer, atop the bottom metal layer, of sub-thickness TK2 using a cold metal process thus forming a composite thick metallization of total thickness TK=TK1+TK2; and d) patterning, referencing the built-in alignment mark, the composite thick metallization whereby form a patterned thick metallization with the process advantages of:
 1. Better metal step coverage owing to the superior metal step coverage of the hot metal process as compared to that of the cold metal process; and
 2. Lower alignment error rate owing to the lower alignment signal noise of the cold metal process as compared to that of the hot metal process.
 2. The method for forming a patterned thick metallization of claim 1 further comprises selecting said sub-thickness TK1 and said sub-thickness TK2 such that the total thickness TK does not exceed a pre-determined maximum total thickness TK_(max) beyond which an unacceptable alignment error rate results owing to an excessive alignment signal noise of the composite thick metallization regardless of the values of TK1 and TK2.
 3. The method for forming a patterned thick metallization of claim 2 further comprises selecting said sub-thickness TK1 and said sub-thickness TK2 such that their ratio R=TK2/TK1 does not exceed a pre-determined maximum ratio R_(max) beyond which an unacceptable metal step coverage results owing to an insufficient sub-thickness TK1.
 4. The method for forming a patterned thick metallization of claim 2 further comprises selecting said sub-thickness TK1 and said sub-thickness TK2 such that their ratio R=TK2/TK1 does not fall below a pre-determined minimum ratio R_(min) below which an unacceptable alignment error rate results owing to an excessive sub-thickness TK1.
 5. The method for forming a patterned thick metallization of claim 1 wherein depositing the bottom metal layer using a hot metal process further comprises vacuum depositing a composition of (aluminum, silicon, copper) at a temperature exceeding 400 degree C.
 6. The method for forming a patterned thick metallization of claim 5 wherein the composition of (aluminum, silicon, copper) further comprises, by weight percentage, Al of about 98˜99%, Si of about 0.5˜1.5% and Cu of about 0.1˜1.0%.
 7. The method for forming a patterned thick metallization of claim 6 wherein the composition of (aluminum, silicon, copper) is, by weight percentage, Al of about 98.5%, Si of about 1.0% and Cu of about 0.5%.
 8. The method for forming a patterned thick metallization of claim 1 wherein depositing the top metal layer using a cold metal process further comprises vacuum depositing a composition of (aluminum, copper) at a temperature of about 300±50 degree C.
 9. The method for forming a patterned thick metallization of claim 8 wherein the composition of (aluminum, copper) further comprises, by weight percentage, Al of about 99.0˜99.9% and Cu of about 0.1˜1.0%.
 10. The method for forming a patterned thick metallization of claim 9 wherein the composition of (aluminum, copper) is, by weight percentage, Al of about 99.5% and Cu of about 0.5%.
 11. The method for forming a patterned thick metallization of claim 2 wherein said TK_(max) is about 4.0 to 5.0 micron.
 12. The method for forming a patterned thick metallization of claim 3 wherein said R_(max) is about 7:1.
 13. The method for forming a patterned thick metallization of claim 4 wherein said R_(min) is about 3:1.
 14. The method for forming a patterned thick metallization of claim 1 further comprises selecting said sub-thickness TK1 and said sub-thickness TK2 such that TK1 is approximately 1.0 microns and TK2 is approximately 3.0 microns.
 15. The method for forming a patterned thick metallization of claim 1 further comprises selecting said sub-thickness TK1 and said sub-thickness TK2 such that TK1 is approximately 0.5 microns and TK2 is approximately 3.5 microns. 